| Brian Holmes on Mon, 7 Aug 2006 01:35:18 +0200 (CEST) |
[Date Prev] [Date Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Date Index] [Thread Index]
| Re: <nettime> Peace-for-War |
Ed Philips wrote:
>Arrighi's long twentieth century thesis which is a kind of
>rethinking of Marx'x MCM formula has some fitness as well.
>To quote Arrighi, "financialization (the capacity of finance
>capital 'to take over and dominate, for a while at least,
>all the activities of the business world') has been the
>result of a recurrent overaccumulation of capital ('the
>accumulation of capital on a scale beyond the normal
>channels for investment'.)
Hi Ed, greetings, thanks for your comments and observations.
Actually, some more would be useful.
I'd be very interested in strong critiques of Bichler &
Nitzan, either of what they claim to add to Marxism (the
notion of differential accumulation), of their empirical
findings (the various graphs) or finally, of their
conclusions (particularly about the influence of a specific
corporate lobby as a factor in US foreign policy).
I'm definitely an amateur at this, but I've read a fair bit
of Harvey, Arrighi, world-systems theory generally, the New
Left Review authors, etc. Very enlightening stuff. What I
always missed, though, were political applications of
notions as abstract as "overaccumulation" and
"financialization." Who are the actors of such processes,
where and when and why do their decisions matter?
Even the French regulation school, though they pay closer
attention to the relations between technological change,
organizational innovations, and social, political or even
cultural norms, still tend mainly to describe shifts between
broad productive paradigms. Well, pretty much everyone I
know in Europe, on an activist level, tried to work in order
to influence what seemed to be a new productive paradigm,
coming in the wake of industrial mass production.
Post-fordism, we called it, using the regulation-school
term. We thought the contradictions of post-Fordism offered
an opening for the transformation of society (ways of
working, measures of value, unemployment policies, urban
ecologies, north-south relations, many things). However, a
sudden political turnabout, with economic and military
consequences far more dramatic than any broad paradigm could
account for, seems to have made much of that work obsolete.
Nobody wants to hear about our social utopias anymore.
This change is particularly acute with respect to the USA,
the hegemon after all, whose transformations affect
everyone. It's abundantly clear that a specific
constellation of actors (ideological, economic, military,
and financial in a markedly statist way) has been at the
helm since Bush came in, or more precisely, since September
11. The differences from the Clinton years (and from the
expansive, internationalizing economy of those years) are
very tangible, not only politically but economically too. In
terms of differential accumulation, I looked at the top 20
profit-makers on the Fortune 500 list of American corps as
published in 2000 and 2006. The difference is striking,
check it out in the table below. The automakers (Ford, GM,
whose sales would be a sign of a growth economy), the telcos
of the 90s boom (SBC, Lucent, Bell Atlantic) and a merger
specialist (Morgan Stanley) all fall out of the top 20
profit-makers, while two oil companies appear from far below
(Chevron and ConocoPhilips), to occupy very high positions.
There is also a reshuffling of rank among financial groups,
which I am not able to read due to insufficient knowledge of
the differences between them. What's amazing, though, is the
increase in absolute profit among the highest rollers, and
particularly at the top six or seven positions, which almost
double in the amount of profit being taken (or more than
triple, in the case of the 2006 leader Exxon, compared to
the former leader in 2000, the financial/industrial corp
General Electric).
What ever happened to the "new economy" of high-tech
innovation, semiotic products and immaterial labor? Why is
this "old" one so vastly much more profitable? Well, I
summed up Bichler and Nitzan's explanations in my text.
Clearly, the process of financialization is not over, and
nor is the associated informational mode of production; but
their objects and orientations have changed in a dramatic
way. In my opinion, neither the 90s tech boom, nor the
current war economy, can be accounted mere "blips" in
history. They have both been too damn important in my life!
In any case, if you want to invest right now, try the oil
companies, or the major arms dealers (I have put together
some stats on them in the second table). But I'm sure you
would be far too disgusted to invest in any of this shit.
There seems to be a difference in the way the groups of
steersmen operate, both on the diplomatic and economic
levels. If you then read, say, Super Imperialism by Michael
Hudson, you begin to get a grasp of the methods used by the
statist, military-oriented group and how they have worked
over the years since WWII. Their propensity to borrow and
print money (Bush has now upped the national debt some 2.4
trillion, coming close to Reagan's score) seems to correlate
with the distance that most East Coast financiers take from
their policies. And their willingness to use the military as
an engine of economic accumulation runs like a red thread
throughout postwar American history. The gap between the two
policy-sets cries out for an explanation that can make a
difference. Generally the Marxist theorists give you a
systemic explanation; capitalism does this or that, it has a
long-term trend. I have always thought that the only way to
help get the Left moving again is to say, groups and
individuals do this or that; and we can stop them.
An important political question remains to my mind, though,
as to whether it's better to focus every effort on
denouncing the military-industrial-statist group, while
attempting to influence the expansionist, civilian-oriented
one towards a more egalitarian and ecological form of
development; or whether the two are not ultimately
inseparable. Well, I think they are, but that still doesn't
eliminate the differences. In short, I think it would be
important to popularize a reading of cyclical change in the
capitalist economy, and to use it as a framework for
strategies that would directly oppose the most dangerous
groups; while pointing to the broad systemic tendencies, so
as not to be surprised by the next seeming turnabout in the
contemporary political economy.
best, Brian
STATS
Here you have the top 20 Fortune 500 corps, not in terms of
size as in the usual list, but in terms of the real profits
they made in 1999 and 2005 (for those of you accustomed to
piggybanks, these figures are in MILLIONS of dollars):
2000 list PROFIT - 2006 list PROFIT
General Electric 10,717 Exxon Mobil 36,130
Citigroup 9,867 Citigroup 24,589
SBC Communications 8,159 Bank of America 16,465
Exxon Mobil 7,910 General Electric 16,353
Bank of America 7,882 Chevron 14,099
Microsoft 7,785 ConocoPhilips 13,529
IBM 7,712 Microsoft 12,254
DuPont 7,690 Wal-Mart 11,231
Altria Group 7,675 American Intl. Gr. 10,477
Intel 7,314 Altria Group 10,435
Ford Motor 7,237 Johnson & Johnson 10,411
General Motors 6,002 Intel 8,664
Merck 5,890 Berkshire Hathaway 8,528
Chase Manhattan 5,446 J.P. Morgan Chase 8,438
Wal-Mart 5,377 Pfizer 8,085
American Intl. Gr. 5,055 IBM 7,934
Morgan Stanley 4,791 Wells Fargo 7,671
Lucent Tech. 4,766 Verizon 7,397
Bell Atlantic 4,202 Proctor & Gamble 7,257
Johnson & Johnson 4,167 Wachovia Corp. 6,643
Here you see the average percentage of return on investment
paid to stockholders of specific defence and aerospace
corporations over the whole period from 1995 to 2005, and
then the percentage of return for the single year of 2005 -
which is dramatically higher in most cases. After that, I
show the total profit of each corp in 2005 (in millions of
dollars), and the percentage increase over 2004 profit -
again, very high increases in just one year. Raytheon, which
shrunk dramatically in the 90s, is like Dracula coming back
to life...
CORP; 95-05 AVG RETURN; 05 RETURN; 05 PROFIT; 04 PROF
- - - - -
Boeing 7.6 37.8 2,572 +37%
United Tech. 18.6 10.0 3,069 +10%
Lockheed Martin 6.6 16.5 1,825 +44%
Northrop-Grumman 8.6 12.6 1,400 +29%
Honeywell Int. 6.6 7.5 1,655 +29%
Raytheon 0.5 5.8 871 +109%
General Dynamics 16.4 10.6 1,461 +19%
# distributed via <nettime>: no commercial use without permission
# <nettime> is a moderated mailing list for net criticism,
# collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets
# more info: majordomo@bbs.thing.net and "info nettime-l" in the msg body
# archive: http://www.nettime.org contact: nettime@bbs.thing.net